I am planning to apply for the upcoming fall semester and was wondering if having a research paper published may be helpful in getting in the school I want. ( Mainly Upenn, UMass and Harvard MLA courses are on top of my list )
I have done B.Arch and have 3 years of professional experience in a landscape firm. I am currently teaching bachelors of architecture at a college as a lecturer.
Salonee
b3tadine[sutures]
Jul 29, 18 11:44 am
What is your analysis of this?
eeayeeayo
Jul 29, 18 2:20 pm
Is your question whether you should list on a resume a paper that you've already had published? If so, the answer is yes.
Or is your question whether you should push to get a paper published before applying? If so, the answer is it depends: do you seriously have an interest in getting a paper published, and would you do that whether or not you were applying to graduate programs? If so then yes. If no then no.
It's not something that's likely to get a whole lot of notice or make or break your application. Many applicants have published, many haven't, and your resume won't get all that much scrutiny. The most important things are your portfolio and recommendations. Don't include the paper itself in your application - it likely won't make it to the admissions committee anyway, as items that weren't requested typically just get filed - unless you bind it into your porftfolio, which is rather obnoxious, and it probably won't be read that way either.
salonee.balakrishnan
Jul 30, 18 1:29 am
Thank you for your reply. My question was if I should push to get a paper published before applying. I think I'd rather then spend my time and energy making my portfolio the best I can. From what I gather on the community discussions here and otherwise that portfolio holds more importance than research papers.
username_af
Aug 2, 18 8:06 am
I\d say focus on your essays and your portfolio for sure!
Check out issuu if you're looking for inspiration.
I am planning to apply for the upcoming fall semester and was wondering if having a research paper published may be helpful in getting in the school I want. ( Mainly Upenn, UMass and Harvard MLA courses are on top of my list )
I have done B.Arch and have 3 years of professional experience in a landscape firm. I am currently teaching bachelors of architecture at a college as a lecturer.
Salonee
What is your analysis of this?
Is your question whether you should list on a resume a paper that you've already had published? If so, the answer is yes.
Or is your question whether you should push to get a paper published before applying? If so, the answer is it depends: do you seriously have an interest in getting a paper published, and would you do that whether or not you were applying to graduate programs? If so then yes. If no then no.
It's not something that's likely to get a whole lot of notice or make or break your application. Many applicants have published, many haven't, and your resume won't get all that much scrutiny. The most important things are your portfolio and recommendations. Don't include the paper itself in your application - it likely won't make it to the admissions committee anyway, as items that weren't requested typically just get filed - unless you bind it into your porftfolio, which is rather obnoxious, and it probably won't be read that way either.
Thank you for your reply. My question was if I should push to get a paper published before applying. I think I'd rather then spend my time and energy making my portfolio the best I can. From what I gather on the community discussions here and otherwise that portfolio holds more importance than research papers.
I\d say focus on your essays and your portfolio for sure!
Check out issuu if you're looking for inspiration.